Why Liquids Other Than Water Should Never Go in Ultrasonic Cleaners

There’s a dangerous misconception circulating in the nail industry:

“If it’s sold with an ultrasonic cleaner, it must be safe.”

Unfortunately, that isn’t always true.

Some detergents and disinfectants marketed for ultrasonic cleaning are:

  • Alcohol-based
  • Solvent-heavy
  • Contain flammable ingredients
  • Contain ammonium chloride

The Science: Why Flammable Liquids Are Dangerous

An ultrasonic cleaner works using high-frequency sound waves that create cavitation.

When cavitation bubbles collapse, they create:

  • Localised pressure spikes
  • Localised temperature spikes
  • Intense microscopic energy

These micro-hotspots can reach extremely high temperatures for fractions of a second.

Now combine that with:

  • Low flash-point liquids
  • Alcohol-based detergents
  • Enclosed metal tank
  • Electrical components

You increase the risk of vapour ignition.

What Is Flash Point?

Flash point is the lowest temperature at which a liquid produces enough vapour to ignite.

Alcohol-based products have very low flash points.

Ultrasonic agitation:

  • Increases vapour production
  • Accelerates evaporation
  • Raises solution temperature
  • Creates vapour above the tank surface

That vapour can ignite if there is:

  • Electrical fault
  • Static discharge
  • Overheating
  • Spark

This is why most ultrasonic cleaner manufacturers explicitly warn:

Do not use liquids other than water.

What About Barbicide?

This is where confusion happens.

Is Barbicide Flammable?

Barbicide concentrate - yes.

It contains isopropyl alcohol, which is flammable and has a low flash point.

This is why the concentrate carries flammable warnings on its Safety Data Sheet (SDS).

Is Properly Diluted Barbicide Flammable?

When diluted correctly according to manufacturer instructions:

  • The alcohol concentration drops significantly
  • It is no longer classified as flammable under normal salon conditions

That’s why diluted Barbicide is safe for temporarily immersion disinfection in a jar or tray.

So Why Not Use It in an Ultrasonic Cleaner?

Even though diluted Barbicide is not classified as flammable:

Ultrasonic cleaners:

  • Generate heat
  • Increase evaporation
  • Agitate continuously
  • Are not explosion-proof units

Most ultrasonic manufacturers advise against alcohol containing solutions because:

  • Vapour production increases under agitation
  • Heat builds during cycles
  • It may void warranty
  • Internal components can degrade

More importantly:

Ultrasonic cleaning is designed for debris removal.

Barbicide is designed for chemical disinfection with stable contact time.

They are two completely different processes.

Why Ammonium Chloride Is Also a Problem

Many ultrasonic detergents contain ammonium chloride.

While marketed as effective cleaners, they present another issue for nail techs.

Ammonium chloride in solution:

  • Is mildly acidic
  • Can react with metal alloys
  • Accelerates corrosion
  • Strips protective coatings

Premium nail tools often have:

  • Titanium coatings
  • Gold finishes
  • Black DCL coatings
  • Plasma colour coatings

These coatings:

  • Improve corrosion resistance
  • Increase durability
  • Enhance cutting performance

Ammonium chloride can:

  • Dull coloured finishes
  • Strip gold plating
  • Cause pitting
  • Reduce corrosion protection

Once coating integrity is compromised:

  • Rust risk increases
  • Tool lifespan shortens
  • Performance declines
  • Tools look worn prematurely

For professional nail technicians investing in premium e-file bits and scissors, this is a costly and unnecessary risk.

The Professional Cleaning Standard

For safe, compliant nail salon hygiene:

Step 1 – Ultrasonic Cleaning 

Use:

Water

Purpose: Remove debris.

Step 2 – Disinfection

Use:

Properly diluted Barbicide (in immersion tray)

Follow exact contact time

Purpose: Kill bacteria, fungi and viruses.

Step 3: Dry thoroughly and store safely.

This separation ensures:

✔ Maximum cleaning efficiency

✔ Proper chemical contact time

✔ Machine longevity

✔ Tool longevity

✔ Salon safety

Just because a detergent is sold with an ultrasonic cleaner does not mean it aligns with:

Scientific best practice

Manufacturer safety guidance

Professional nail tech standards

Avoid:

✖ Flammable liquids

✖ Alcohol-heavy solvents

✖ Ammonium chloride-based detergents

Protect your:

Clients

Tools

Equipment

Reputation



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